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Google Crime The Courts United States

Google Says Geofence Warrants Make Up One-Quarter Of All US Demands (techcrunch.com) 55

For the first time, Google has published the number of geofence warrants it's historically received from U.S. authorities, providing a rare glimpse into how frequently these controversial warrants are issued. ZDNet's Zack Whittaker reports: The figures, published Thursday, reveal that Google has received thousands of geofence warrants each quarter since 2018, and at times accounted for about one-quarter of all U.S. warrants that Google receives. The data shows that the vast majority of geofence warrants are obtained by local and state authorities, with federal law enforcement accounting for just 4% of all geofence warrants served on the technology giant. According to the data, Google received 982 geofence warrants in 2018, 8,396 in 2019 and 11,554 in 2020. But the figures only provide a small glimpse into the volume of warrants received and did not break down how often it pushes back on overly broad requests.

Geofence warrants are also known as "reverse-location" warrants, since they seek to identify people of interest who were in the near vicinity at the time a crime was committed. Police do this by asking a court to order Google, which stores vast amounts of location data to drive its advertising business, to turn over details of who was in a geographic area, such as a radius of a few hundred feet at a certain point in time, to help identify potential suspects. Google has long shied away from providing these figures, in part because geofence warrants are largely thought to be unique to Google. Law enforcement has long known that Google stores vast troves of location data on its users in a database called Sensorvault, first revealed by The New York Times in 2019.
Google spokesperson Alex Krasov said in a statement: "We vigorously protect the privacy of our users while supporting the important work of law enforcement. We developed a process specifically for these requests that is designed to honor our legal obligations while narrowing the scope of data disclosed."
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Google Says Geofence Warrants Make Up One-Quarter Of All US Demands

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  • Sensorsieve is more like it.

  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Friday August 20, 2021 @10:24PM (#61713651) Journal

    "We vigorously protect the privacy of our users while supporting the important work of law enforcement. We developed a process specifically for these requests that is designed to honor our legal obligations while narrowing the scope of data disclosed."

    It's almost Soviet-like

    • by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Friday August 20, 2021 @10:48PM (#61713689) Journal

      It's called being between a rock and a hard place. Something Slashdot appears to have never encountered.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        >between
        nah Billy, that word means in neither of two places, look can you see it here in your My First Dictionary?

        they chose one, Billy

        be ready, your second encounter with the word will be on the quiz

      • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Saturday August 21, 2021 @11:20AM (#61714849)

        There is one simple means by which Google can be free from handing over this data. It is very very simple...

        DO NOT COLLECT THE DATA!

        If Google felt it important to protect the privacy of the individual and they know the government is going to keep coming to them to get this data then take the code that collects this data and wipe it from their systems. Then wipe all prior location data. Anything in progress may be protected by a warrant so they can't delete that legally but they can stop collecting in the future without violating any laws.

        If the government demands Google collect this data then Google becomes an agent of the government and this becomes a violation of our rights as protected under the constitution as amended. The government cannot track us in case we commit a crime or are a witness to a crime. If there is incidental data out there then they can seek warrants to get it, like with Google's advertising tracking.

        I suspect that we are very soon going to see a competitor to Google that doesn't collect all we do. When that happens then Google will have to change their ways, such as not collect location data, to keep customers.

        • There is one simple means by which Google can be free from handing over this data.

          Yeah, donate to political candidates that exhibit more respect. They have enough money to influence an election and prevent all this from happening.

        • There's not really room for competition with the big G. Don't they make most of their money on ads? The few areas where it was possible to set up your own large ad network, like making your own social media site that most of the population spends most of their time on, and running your own ads on it, are already saturated.

          If you mean a new phone OS, you're looking at a similar problem as unseating Windows as a desktop OS. Technically possible, technically desirable, but nobody's going to make money on it so

          • Re: Addendum (Score:4, Informative)

            by sound+vision ( 884283 ) on Saturday August 21, 2021 @02:59PM (#61715407) Journal

            I forgot. Even if you replace Android it won't matter. One of the reasons 5G is getting pushed is that it lets the carriers collect the same granularity of location data as Google does. In a few years when the 4G towers get shut off, the only answer is going to be ditching the phone.

            • In a few years when the 4G towers get shut off, the only answer is going to be ditching the phone.

              WiFi phones and services are a thing. There's location data tacked on to some WiFi systems but that requires cooperation from the phone to identify itself. A company trying to get in the space of privacy conscious smart devices could start with a new OS for existing devices like the iPod Touch and/or some Android devices, devices that are smart phones except for the lack of a cellular radio. Then they can move to partnering with a hardware manufacturer on making devices specific to their service. Then m

      • That argument is bogus. They're not stuck at all. They have enough money to finance opposition candidates that could protect our rights.

      • Encrypt it all and tell law enforcement to take it up with the laws of the universe.
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday August 20, 2021 @10:34PM (#61713665)

    But how can this possibly jibe with the constitutional principle of “innocent until proven guilty”?

    https://study.com/academy/less... [study.com]

    • by couchslug ( 175151 ) on Friday August 20, 2021 @10:48PM (#61713687)

      The "truth" being sought is the whereabouts of individuals. Finding out who was at the scene of a crime is basic police work and not inherently judgmental.

      I'm aware of my metadata and would eagerly invoke it to prove my whereabouts should they come into question. I already use my location history because I find it interesting.

      https://support.google.com/acc... [google.com]

      Of course bad actors could send their devices with others while going about their business but most criminals are a stupid lot.

      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        The blanket disclosure of everyone who was near the scene of a crime gives police a large number of potential suspects. All they need to do is find a few of these who don't have a viable "alibi" and bingo! they've solved the crime.
        Police get lots of points for "solving" a crime. They don't get penalized for sending the wrong person to jail.

    • In an investigation into a suspected but as-yet-unsolved crime, it seem rather inevitable that no one has yet been proven guilty.

    • But how can this possibly jibe with the constitutional principle of “innocent until proven guilty”?

      It's thoroughly constitutional to request a warrant before someone is proven guilty.

      What seems awry in this case is that judges are apparently granting warrants on no suspicions other than that you were near the scene of the crime. (And of course, not even knowing that much until the warrant is served to Google.)

      • It's thoroughly constitutional to request a warrant before someone is proven guilty.

        For the police to make such a request, they first need evidence showing a reasonable probability that the person was involved in the crime. They can't just say "let us search the houses of everyone in Petaluma, California".

    • These warrants ask "who was in the house (or yard) at the time of the killing?"

      That's not a statement that Joe Bob is guilty of murder.
      It's not a ruling that anyone in particular is guilty of anything in particular. It's just investigating who was present at the time some crime was committed.* Those present would probably be witnesses or suspects.

      As I see it, this technique could be used unreasonably or reasonably. Unreasonable - asking who was within two miles of a large protest on a given day. Reasonable

      • These warrants ask "who was in the house (or yard) at the time of the killing?"

        Serious question - do you have evidence of this? Because the linked document doesn't provide any specifics at all... only that geofence requests were made.

        There's a world of difference between "who was within 50 feet of this spot at 3:25pm on April 11" and "give me the list of everyone who passed within a mile of this location on Thursday".

        • Well the summary says "such as a radius of a few hundred feet at a certain point in time". The median lot size on the US is about 100'x100' feet.

          If you research it further and get facts about what's typical, I'd be interested to hear what you find.

          Surely someone has asked for one that's much too broad, at least once. I think we kinda know that. I'm curious what's typical.

          • I did read TFS and TFA, and the text was pulled from the Techcruch article - but there's nothing relevant in the actual Google document, and he didn't interview anyone at Google (there was "a statement" from the company). So I suspect the article's author just put that text in as an illustration, and it's not based on anything in particular.

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Friday August 20, 2021 @10:42PM (#61713673)

    It starts with not having the data to begin with.

    • Well yes one can turn off location services, but that just means the information comes from another source, your carrier. The solution, naturally the harder one is a constitutional amendment stating a right to privacy.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday August 21, 2021 @04:41AM (#61714043)

      You know, I believe EU law states exactly that. Because data you do not have cannot be misused. And hence the first thing is that in the EU they are not allowed to collect location data without explicit consent.

      • by hjf ( 703092 )

        "explicit consent" sounds so grandiloquent and it's just a fucking "OK" button where you agree to Terms and Conditions.
        Also Apple provides "impenetrable security" for iCloud and now it turns out they've been looking at your photos all along and are fully aware of how many "illegal content" is hosted by them.

        Can you try being less naive?

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          "explicit consent" sounds so grandiloquent and it's just a fucking "OK" button where you agree to Terms and Conditions.
          Also Apple provides "impenetrable security" for iCloud and now it turns out they've been looking at your photos all along and are fully aware of how many "illegal content" is hosted by them.

          Can you try being less naive?

          Nope. It requires explicite, informed consent. So it will have at the very least its own OK button coming with an explanation what exactly you consent here too. Could you find out some minimal facts before accusing people of being naive? Because that sounds very much like you are the naive one here.

      • You know, I believe EU law states exactly that. Because data you do not have cannot be misused. And hence the first thing is that in the EU they are not allowed to collect location data without explicit consent.

        Yes, in EU when you buy a cellphone and you boot it for the first time, you get a screen where you are presented with the choice of either agreeing to terms and conditions, or owning a very expensive brick. Such a huge difference it makes.

    • I have no idea what location data Google has.
      I understand that those of you who have Google accounts can look up your location history.
      But what about the phones without any Google account on them?

  • by jeti ( 105266 ) on Saturday August 21, 2021 @12:55AM (#61713823)
    Can a US court order a geofence warrant for a location outside the US?
    Can a Russian court order a geofence warrant for a location outside Russia?
    • A US court can demand any information which Google has stored anywhere in the world. This is because US Law applies to US Citizens and Corporations everywhere in the world, not just in the US. This is also why the IRS can tax your overseas income even though you don't even live in the US, if you are a US citizen.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      A court can order anything it wishes to. Whether the order can be enforced can be a different matter. Courts have ordered people given asylum (by someone else) to be executed.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday August 21, 2021 @04:39AM (#61714037)

    This basically means "We do not care about the privacy of our users at all, but like to lie about that." Because otherwise they would not record that data as they know it is a privacy invasion and they know they cannot keep it private.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      That's not true. Google considers the data about it's users to be an important commercial secret. They care a lot about it, and don't want to share it with anyone (else). Their business is selling ads to targeted audiences, and they don't want anyone else able to compete with them.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Saturday August 21, 2021 @05:33AM (#61714105)

    Wear gloves, wear a mask, don't drive your own car to the robbery, AND LEAVE YOUR PHONE AT HOME?

    • There was a case of some idiot that mailed a dog muzzle to herself, she claimed it was from some unknown person trying to send her a message. It turned out it was ordered from her Amazon account and paid for with her credit card. Either this person stole her credit card and then replaced it without her knowledge, while also somehow gaining access to her Amazon account, or she ordered it herself. Someone would think such a person would run up hundreds of dollars on other purchases, and not bother to retur

  • *ba-dum TISS*

    . . .

    "Yeah, we do... unless some advertisers pays us money. Otherwise we couldn't demand that money, now could we?"

    . . .

    All I wonder, is: Why does law enforcement just buy a few ads for that time frame. (Yeah, I mean in the past). It would result in the same thing. By it being in the past, Google could tell what its purpose is, and respond accordingly.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      You misunderstand their business model. They want to be the only ones able to sell ads to targeted audiences, so they don't want to share the data, they want to sell ad placement.

      Whether they would sell ads to folks whose name begins with "bare" and ends with "foot" is an interesting question, and I don't know the answer.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Because Google doesn't want to give out it's proprietary information. It places the ads to meet the specs, it doesn't say where it placed them. So that wouldn't return the desired information. (And they probably *can't* place ads in the past....but they might sell a contract to attempt to do so.)

    • They not only purchase ads some branches of LEO run active honeypots. Entrapment maybe a defense but good luck chuck.
  • Every piece of technology has duality. While the above may be troubling to some, it has it's benefits too. 18 months ago, search and rescue was looking for a man who went missing in a popular hiking area. Cellular pings put him in one location but he wasn't there nor was his cellphone. Using exigent circumstances, the Sheriff examined his computer and learned that he used Google location services. This was far more accurate and showed him about a mile west of the cellular ping location. That ended up

  • If the crown issues a weren't to stop all shipping for inspection of tax at a port that is a general Warrant. The entire legal system was founded on general warrants unconstitutional. Much more than an area 50x50m around a murder site for a hour is not general warrant, the 312.98 acres of grant park in Chicago during lallapaloosa over a weekend because someone's purse is missing is a general warrant. Unfoturnalty we know the American legal system is so corrupt the warrant applications are probably

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